This collecion consists of 566 photographs, negatives, slides, certificates, and artifacts that document the professional life of Mildred Trotter. Depicted subjects include portraits of Trotter from childhood and throughout her career, portraits of colleagues, and former students, as well as group portraits of Trotter at various class reunions from Mount Holyoke College and Washington University School of Medicine. Other significant subjects in this collection include: various views of Mulago Hospital in Kampala, Uganda, where Trotter spent a term teaching at Makerere University College; photographs from Trotter's work with the U.S. Army Graves Registration Service at Schofield Barracks, Oahu, Hawaii; and trips to China, Taiwan, and Antarctica.
This collection consists of 79 reproductions of lithographs and paintings depicting Paracelsus, illustrations from his writings, his letters, and views of his hometown near Einsieldeln, Switzerland.
This collection primarily includes documents and video recordings relating to the study and diagnosis of Landau-Kleffner Syndrome. This syndrome is a rare disorder in which children lose the ability to speak and respond to language and was identified and described by Kleffner and William M. Landau, MD in 1957.
Of note are video recordings of diagnostic and follow-up interviews with a patient who was successfully treated for Landau-Kleffner Syndrome as a child (Series 2: Video Recordings, 1961-2007). Also noteworthy are correspondence and other documents relating to a symposium held in 2007 to mark the 50th anniversary of the identification of Landau-Kleffner Syndrome (Series 1: Documents relating to Landau-Kleffner Syndrome, 1957-2014).
The case of the patient interviewed in the recordings is included in Mantovani J.F. & Landau W.M. (1980). “Acquired Aphasia with Convulsive Disorder: Course and Prognosis.” Neurology, 30 (5), 524–529. In the article the patient is identified as Patient 7.
This collection consists of 3 drawings bound in a booklet as part of a proposal for a Regional Cancer Center in the Washington University Medical Center.
This collection includes an assortment of campus publications from the Danforth Campus of Washington University. No attempt has been made to collect all of the Danforth Campus publications because this effort would duplicate those of the Washington Univesity Archives. However, the selected publications, many of which provide relevant information pertaining to the School of Medicine, have been kept at the Becker Archives for the convenience of researchers.
This collection includes 37 certificates and artifacts documenting the professional and scientific achievements of Joseph Erlanger. Certificates and medallians include various honorary degree diplomas, award certificates and medallions, and scientific society membership certificates. The collection also includes various academic hoods, an academic gown, Erlanger, Gasser and Bishop's home-made cathode ray tube, and the death mask of Erlanger.
This collection documents both Washington University’s Program in Occupational Therapy, and its predecessor, the St. Louis School of Occupational Therapy. This collection includes administrative records, student notebooks, information regarding scholarships, photographs, publications, and accreditation documents.
Program in Occupational Therapy, Washington University School of Medicine
The collection has been divided into two sub-groups for organizational purposes. The administrative records of the department are found in Sub-Group 1 and records relating to the Wernse Cancer Research Laboratory are found in Sub-Group 2.
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University School of Medicine
The Institute for Biomedical Computing (IBC) was created in 1984 with the administrative unification of several independent computer laboratories at Washington University. Two of these previously independent groups represented in this collection of records are the Biomedical Computer Laboratory (BCL) and the Computer Systems Laboratory (CSL).
Institute for Biomedical Computing, Washington University School of Medicine
This collection contains records from Marcus E. Raichle, MD, Professor of Radiology, Professor of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Professor of Neuroscience, Professor of Neurology, the Alan A and Edith L Wolff Distinguished Professor of Medicine, and past head of the Neuroimaging Laboratory Washington University School of Medicine.
PC102 (Albert H. Fuller collection): Personal documents of a dental surgeon and educator, late 19th century. Includes lecture admissions cards for the Missouri Dental College and a scrapbook.
1 bound copy of "C. Barber Mueller: A Family Memoir." The memoir was authored by Charles G. Roland and has been assigned collection number PC113 in addition to being a part of FC144.